A participant plays a drum during a workshop for teachers to learn how to integrate music into math, literacy, social studies, and science.

Barling Elementary School teachers are looking forward to putting into practice techniques they learned about integrating the arts when school starts again. Barling is a recent addition to the U of A A+ Schools program.

Carl Hill, Barling principal, said he knew other schools in the Fort Smith School District were involved with the program and that Barling students are pretty creative.

"We do a lot of stuff that A+ promotes anyway as far as school and staff," Hill said. "Our kids do pretty cool things with music. Our kids win art awards and awards for dance and cheerleading."

After Melanie Landrum, A+ executive director, visited Barling to talk to a group of 11 teachers, Hill took the group to visit other A+ schools in central Arkansas, a five-hour round trip.

"We decided it was a good match for us," Hill said.

Some of the paraprofessionals and secretaries also took the A+ training, he said.

The College of Education and Health Professions at the U of A received funding earlier this year from the Windgate Foundation in Siloam Springs to support the A+ program, which is based in North Little Rock.

A+ Schools provides professional development, networking, and research data to its member schools. Its focus is arts integration, in which some type of art - including music, visual art, drama, and dance - is incorporated into subjects such as literacy, math, science, and history. The Arkansas Department of Education funded five-day training sessions for new schools this year.

At least 85 percent of a school's teachers must approve of a school's application to A+. Once a school is accepted, its teachers take part in a five-day training institute in the summer and two on-site professional development sessions provided by the program during the school year over a three-year period. Cost to the schools is based on location and size of the school.

Other new schools that took part in training in June and July with Barling were Hamburg Middle School, Portland Elementary School, and Noble-Allbritton Elementary School, all in the Hamburg School District. A+ staff also provide two-day training for three schools that are in their final year of training: Bobby G. Lester Elementary and Murrell Taylor Elementary in the Jacksonville North Pulaski School District and White County Central High School.

Teachers and arts specialists from across the state who have been trained in what's called the Eight Essentials train school personnel. The eight essentials - arts, curriculum, experiential learning, multiple learning pathways, enriched assessment, collaboration, infrastructure, and culture - are part of a whole-school design with an arts-integration component.

Landrum, a former A+ school principal, works with the administrators of each school to outline leadership responsibilities.

Cristy West, principal of Portland Elementary School, said she was thrilled when her school's application was accepted.

"One step we took before submitting was to take a team to visit Rhetta Brown Elementary in El Dorado, which is a campus very comparable to mine in size and student population and is an Arkansas A+ school," West said. "The team liked what it saw."

"The training that the A+ Fellows conducted in Hamburg was awesome," West continued. "We had a 'homeroom' with two Fellows and then went to break-out sessions with other Fellows."

Fellows are teachers, teaching artists, and professors from across the state who conduct the training in arts integration and the other seven essentials, Landrum explained.

West continued, "We experienced music, drama, art, and dance in the break-outs. Because teachers experienced it and actively participated, they saw how engaging it will be for our students. Our two 'homeroom' Fellows compiled a resource folder for us as we worked through the Eight Essentials that make up A+. My staff and I will review the folder and our work before our students come to get us back into the A+ frame of mind."

About the College of Education and Health Professions: The College of Education and Health Professions offers advanced academic degrees as well as professional development opportunities and learning communities in service to the education and health systems of Arkansas and beyond. The college provides the education and experiences for a range of professional roles, ranging from community mental health counselors to school teachers and leaders. Programs in adult and higher education, along with educational technology and sport management, and human resource and workforce development, offer a broad range of options. In addition to education-related opportunities, the college prepares nurses, speech-language pathologists, health educators and administrators, recreation professionals, rehabilitation counselors and human performance researchers.